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Surveillance in Haiti

In response to the 2010 cholera outbreak, the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) established a National Cholera Surveillance System (NCSS) with technical assistance from CDC and the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO). The NCSS was developed to address immediate needs of capturing and summarizing daily reports, operating in affected areas, and being rapidly scalable.

The NCSS is composed of both governmental and nongovernmental health facilities and collects and reports data to the MSPP by health authorities in the departments and communes. The MSPP is responsible for the management, analysis, and dissemination of all data.

Surveillance System Outputs

Provide the Haitian government with the ability to track the epidemic and update the global community in a timely fashion

Facilitate the mobilization of support from technical and donor organizations

The data from the NCSS provided valuable feedback for distributing of prevention and treatment resources. informing epidemiologic studies and projecting the evolution of the epidemic. The NCSS also informed technical experts on options for the targeted use of oral cholera vaccine in Haiti.

Additionally, NCSS data have been essential in advocating for an international effort to eliminate cholera transmission on the island of Hispaniola led by the governments of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, CDC, PAHO, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and other partners. For more information, see the Advocacy, Policy, and Recommendations page.